What's Going On Around The World Today?

During US President Barack Obama’s farewell address, he told Americans to reject fear and divisiveness. BuzzFeed News has published the report making explosive but unverified allegations that Donald Trump has deep ties to Russia. And a jury has sentenced white supremacist Dylann Roof to death for murdering nine black Charleston church members in 2015.

In his farewell address to the nation, President Obama called on Americans to come together to uphold the ideals of democracy.

“That’s what our democracy demands. It needs you,” the president said. “Not just when there’s an election, not just when your own narrow interest is at stake, but over the full span of a lifetime.”

Obama urged Americans to have empathy for their fellow citizens who are different from them

and called on people to move outside the “bubble” of their own neighborhood or Facebook feed and to embrace facts over opinions.

Those unhappy with the direction of politics should get involved, he said, whether it’s engaging in conversations with their neighbors, organizing, or even running for office themselves.

Where was Sasha Obama? Turns out that even if you’re POTUS’s kid, there are some responsibilities you can’t escape, like high school. According to a White House official, Sasha had to stay behind in DC because it was a school night and she had an exam in the morning.

These reports allege that Donald Trump has deep ties to Russia.

A dossier, compiled by a person who has claimed to be a former British intelligence official, alleges Russia has compromising information on Trump. The allegations are unverified, and the report contains errors.

BuzzFeed News has published the full document so that Americans can make up their own minds about allegations about the president-elect that have circulated at the highest levels of the US government.

White supremacist Dylann Roof has been sentenced to death for murdering nine black Charleston church members in 2015.

Roof was convicted of 33 charges, including nine murders and 12 hate crime violations, in connection with the shooting inside Charleston’s Emanuel AME church. The jury’s decision to sentence Roof to death came after a penalty phase trial that saw four days of testimony from loved ones of the victims.

During the penalty phase, government prosecutors argued that Roof deserved the death penalty because he showed no remorse for his crimes.

Yesterday was day one of Senator Jeff Sessions’ confirmation hearing to be US attorney general. ~A lot~ happened.

Sessions said he’d recuse himself from any investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails after he was critical of her during the campaign.

The attorney general nominee said he wouldn’t support a ban on Muslim immigrants to the US based solely on religion, despite Trump saying that such a ban should be in place.

Sessions denied past allegations of racism and prejudice leveled against him, and said that while he disagrees with Roe v. Wade (the 1973 Supreme Court decision that allows women the right to an abortion), he would respect it as the “law of the land.”

Trump’s America: The White House LGBT liaison is worried Trump will scrap the position. And the president-elect moved to question one of the signature medical accomplishments of the 20th century Tuesday, reportedly appointing a leading critic of vaccines to chair a commission on vaccine safety.

Swearing in the new president: Police worry that Trump supporters will bring guns to the inauguration. And the chair of President-elect Trump’s inauguration committee said the ceremony will have a “soft sensuality” and a “poetic cadence.”

Sexual assault allegations: After former anchor Juliet Huddy accused Bill O’Reilly and Fox News co-President Jack Abernethy of sexual harassment, the network reportedly reached a settlement that kept the allegations quiet. And 18 women filed a civil lawsuit against USA Gymnastics, Michigan State University, and a local gymnastics club, claiming the institutions failed to protect them from a doctor now facing child sexual abuse charges.

Big pharma:Martin Shkreli was everywhere last year. Now the industry says moving on from Shkreli and doing damage control are the top priorities for drug makers in 2017.